Certificates of Deposit (CDs) no longer offer an attractive enough interest rate for it to be worth it. If you take a look at ING Direct’s Orange CDs, you’re looking at a 6 month commitment earning you a mere 4.15% APY compared to their regular rate of 4.0% APY on their Orange Savings account. So the difference in earned interest is $1.50 more for a CD when you lock it up for 6 months. If you’re willing to lock it up for their longest time period, 5 years, the difference is $7 a year. (Since both rates are taxed as 1099-INT income, the difference in earnings is the same so we can ignore that mathematical step for simplicity’s sake)

If you were to find the rates at PenFed (reddish pink box at the right), probably one of the most generous rates around for CDs, you’ll see that a 6 month rate is 4% APY, no difference. Slide down to the 5-year CDs and the APY of 5.75% means a difference of $17.50 per year when your money is locked up for five years.

Are you willing to be paid an extra $17.50 a year to not really be able to get to your money? I’m not.

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13 Responses to “Certificates of Deposit Aren’t Worth It”

I don’t think CDs are great investments either. I’d rather put my money in an online savings account. I’d like my money to be liquid and if I don’t need my money for awhile, I’d put it in an investment vehicle that would have the chance to offer higher rewards.

I also have never felt like the benefit of increased return offered by a CD offset the downside of having your money tied up for 2 years or so. The APY on the CD just isn’t high enough to make it worth losing the liquidity on that cash…

One possible benefit from having a CD ladder of some sorts is that it probably encourages a ‘hands-off’ attitude toward that money. If it is sitting in the savings account where it could be easily transfered to your checking account, the temptation to do so is a little greater (at least to me) than if you know there is a penalty involved.

This post is ignorant non-sense. First of all you are giving returns in real dollar figures without specifying the initial investment amount which would be $1000.00 for the numbers you are using. So $17.50 per year extra is not worth it to you? If you had $500,000.00 in a CD that would amount to an extra $8750.00 per year, is that worth it to you? Its such a non-sensical way of talking about return rates.

You don’t put every last dollar you might need in the next couple years into a CD. If you don’t have enough reserve cash to say you won’t need that money for a couple years then you don’t use a CD. Thats basic. If all the extra cash you have to put in on fixed interest is $1000.00 then CDs never make sense. If you have $500,000 of Cash sitting around that you don’t want to invest in something more risky and over the years you can work into a CD ladder that has 100,000 coming due every year over a 5 year period then you really don’t have your money all locked up and as the one responder said, what happens if the economy goes into recession in the next few years and short term rates head back down to 2%. That 5.75% at Pen Fed is looking pretty good then.

1 – You can still get to your money, but you will give up 3 months of interest. So, you are able to lock in a rate and you have to pay as small penalty (loss of interest) if you need the money. Not a bad trade for a locked in rate.

2 – You should always look at inflation and real returns. You have to put it somewhere, so that you can keep up with inflation. Here is what you should do.

I know you are not willing to be paid an extra $17.50 a year to not really be able to get to your money. But what if it was 10% or 15% or even 17%? Apparently, a lot of people are willing to lend other people that they don’t know money. I recently stumbled upon Prosper (www.prosper.com), which is a peer lending site. It is unreal that some people are looking to borrow money and willing to pay a high percentage. And other people are even more than willing to lend it?!

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